Customizable Plant Growing System

ABSTRACT

The system includes a pre-fabricated garden seedsheet, with seeds and soil embedded in water-soluble pods within a weed barrier fabric. Each water-soluble pod is fabricated from dissolvable material, which are affixed together to form cavities in which seeds and soil are applied. The pods are then affixed to the weed barrier matrix in an arrangement dictated by the plant algorithm. Upon contact with water, the pods rapidly dissolve, thereby beginning the germination process in which the seeds sprout and emerge through the aligned openings in the weed barrier fabric. The selection of plants and their physical arrangement within each seedsheet may be determined by a software-driven plant algorithm that extrapolates plant characteristics, environmental requirements, and companion benefits. The algorithm may be used both on the customer-facing software program, as well as the in-house design process to create pre-designed seed sheets.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

This application is a continuation application of U.S. patentapplication Ser. No. 15/507,352, filed Feb. 28, 2017; which claimspriority to PCT application PCT/US2015/048436, filed Sep. 3, 2015, whichclaims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/046,362, filedSep. 5, 2014;

FEDERALLY-SPONSORED RESEARCH

None

PATENT AGENT DOCKET

CloudFarmContJune2021

BACKGROUND

The common practice of preparing a garden bed, buying bulk packets ofseeds, and measuring out each individual plant's spacing requirements isa tedious and time-intensive process. Planning and planting a garden isa knowledge and labor intensive process that requires a gardener to knowthe spacing requirements for each plant, soil pH requirements, nutrientrequirements, sunlight requirements, water requirements, pestmanagement, and companion benefits between plant varieties. It is ahighly complex calculation that takes into account a large variety ofvariables. The gardener may end up with a multitude of extra seeds andmust keep them in a controlled environment to prevent rot and spoiling.In addition, the planting process usually results in hours spentuncomfortably kneeling over a garden, measuring and digging individualholes and rows, fumbling with frustratingly tiny seeds, and thenfrequently weeding to ensure a non-competitive and nutrient-rich growingatmosphere.

The present system serves to provide innovative solutions to the processof designing a garden, the process of physically sowing fruit,vegetable, flower, and herb seeds, the process of weed control, and theprocess of identifying recipes congruent with harvestable produce. Thesystem provides the user the ability to chose an existing seedsheet SKU,or design their own garden, preferably online, and purchase acorresponding seedsheet that includes all of the plant seeds that theywish to grow with their ideal spacing characteristics. This systemserves to codify the variability of plant environmental requirementsinto an algorithm that thereby simplifies the designing of a garden, thesowing of seeds, the weeding maintenance of a garden, the economicalburden of overbuying seeds, and the searching of recipes congruent withavailable harvested ingredients. The plant algorithm may be used tocreate seed sheets, including but not limited to pre-designed SKU's, aswell as future pre-designed products.

Through virtual design and the simple process of planting a seedsheet,the investigative thought-process of identifying environmentallycompatible plants, and labor of physically sowing seeds is reduced to abrief online session and near-instantaneous unfurling of the seedsheetatop the garden. Additionally, the burdensome task of regular weedingthat's usually necessary for the planted seeds to germinate (as well ascontinue to develop, as weeds often out-compete garden plants foravailable nutrients), is eliminated, or greatly reduced with the presentsystem. This system serves to remove and greatly reduce the necessityfor weeding by incorporating a weed barrier landscape fabric, withwater-soluble/dissolvable fabric openings in the location of theuser-selected seeds. As the seeds germinate and develop the weed barrierprevents any weeds from growing, and significantly limits any weeding toonly the openings where the desired plants are sowed.

BRIEF SUMMARY

The present system includes an optimally designed pre-fabricated gardenwith seeds and soil embedded in water-soluble pods within a weed barrierfabric. The physical arrangement of plants within each product may bedetermined by a plant algorithm that extrapolates plant characteristics,environmental requirements, and companion benefits to design the mostsuccessful harvests possible. Each water-soluble pod is fabricated withdissolvable material including but not limited to fabric and films,which are affixed together to form cavities in which seeds and soil areapplied. The pods are then affixed to the weed barrier matrix in anarrangement dictated by the design algorithm. Upon watering, the podsrapidly dissolve, thereby beginning the germination process in which theseeds sprout and emerge through the aligned openings in the weed barrierfabric. The algorithm may be used both on the customer-facing softwareprogram, as well as the in-house design process to create pre-designedseed sheets.

The present system may also include a software-driven and designed seedsheet that allows a customizable arrangement of seeds such as vegetable,herb, and flowers, to be adhered between disks ofwater-soluble/dissolvable fabric within a larger medium of weed-barrierfabric. The software program provides the user the ability to selectwhich varieties of plants they wish to grow, and using a proprietaryplant algorithm arranges the plants by their corresponding spacingrequirements and compatibility with various environmental variables.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

FIG. 1 shows interface for planning a garden and creating a seedsheet

FIG. 2 shows the physical seedsheet created per the digital design

FIG. 3 shows additional features for an interface for planning a gardenand creating a seedsheet

FIG. 4 shows a section view of a seedsheet Pod assembly

FIG. 5 shows an underside plan-view of a seedsheet Pod

FIG. 6 shows an interface for relating recipes to garden planning

FIG. 7 shows alternate embodiment of a seedsheet with a soil and seedcombination cavity

FIG. 8 shows alternate embodiment of a seedsheet with a soil and seedcombination cavity

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Described herein is a seedsheet system for selecting and growing plants.This system may optionally include the design of the seeds sheet by asoftware program, for which a user interface is shown in FIG. 1. Suchsoftware may be in the form of a website, an app, or other suitablemeans for a user to interact with the interface. The software includes agridded virtual garden (8) with a drag-drop interface to provide adigital plant arrangement (10) that corresponds to the layout of seeds(11), as shown in the virtual image of the seedsheet in FIG. 2.

The user begins by selecting the dimensions of their existing gardenspace (12), and next specifies the location (and subsequent gardenclimate according to appropriate guideline, such as but not limited tothe USDA Plant Hardiness Map) of their garden (via zip code, or otherlocation reference), as well as the sunlight availability of theirgarden (4). The user then selects which vegetables, herbs, and flowers(17,18,19) they wish to plant and based on the size, location, andsunlight availability of their garden, the software filters theavailable plant selection by plants that will thrive in that specificenvironment (20). During this selection process the user may seeinformation (21) regarding the environmental requirements of the plant,such as the sunlight requirement (26), climate requirement (25),days-to-maturity/DTM (22), and recipes from the Recipe Database thatinclude that specific plant (24). When a specific plant is selected (23,9), a colored block (10) is placed onto the visual grid (8) of theirgarden which the user can manipulate the positioning of. The user cancontinue to add (23) plants to the visual grid and manipulate as desireduntil there is no more available space. Collision detection softwarecode prevents the plant blocks from intruding into the spacingrequirements of each other. As plants are added, the filtered availableplant list (20) is further amended to suggest companion plants withmutual benefits as well as warnings against plants with negativecompanion effects.

As the user adds plants to the virtual seedsheet, the price of theseedsheet is calculated (1) based on garden size and types and amountsof seeds included. Additionally the comparative costs of average retailproduce may be calculated (2) to provide the user with an estimate ofsavings. Based on the germination percentage of each selected plant typeas well as mutual compatibility with the other plants selected, anestimated garden-wide germination percentage may be calculated (3). Thedays-to-maturity/DTM for each selected plant may be calculated andgraphed (5) to aid the users' design, especially vital when designing aseedsheet with a particular meal in mind. Lastly an instructional video(13) and narrative (14) may provide the user with any needed assistancein the creation of their seedsheet. All of the above inputs andconstraints described relating to seed selection, spacing requirements,etc., are referred to as the plant algorithm.

A sheetsheet may include any number of rows and columns of grow holes,according to the size constraints the user may have for available groundon which to plant the sheetsheet. Similarly, the seedsheet may containdifferent seeds in different grow holes, optimized according tocompatibility between the different plants, and other constraints. Oncethe desired plant arrangement is finalized the user may purchase theseedsheet, preferably online, with the seedsheet produced by the vendor.The user's designed digital sheet is then transcribed to a weed barrier,or weed-blocking fabric layer. In the preferred embodiment, the weedfabric layer is a UV resistant, hydrophilic treated, weed barrierlandscape fabric (16), with other suitable materials also usable. Perthe users' digital design, or the manufacturer's design, grow holes (16)which are circular holes approximately five centimeters in diameter, arecut from the weed barrier fabric corresponding to each individual pod'slocation. In the preferred embodiment, each pod is circular in shape,and composed of layers of water-soluble film that are affixed togetherin a manner in which cavities are formed. The seed cavity (32), which isformed between the secondary (28) and tertiary (31) layers ofwater-soluble material, contains the designated plant seeds (33), andits centralized location ensures plant germination in the middle of eachpod, thereby removing the potential for seeds to shift beneath the weedbarrier and not germinate.

Between the secondary (28) and primary (27) layers of water-soluble filmis the growing medium cavity, or soil cavity (30). Soil cavity (30),containing soil, peet, coir, compost or otherwise similar growingmedium, is filled to a depth of approximately 1.5 cm with growingmedium. The seed cavity (32) is formed between the secondary layer (28)and tertiary layer (31), and is expansive enough to hold a plurality ofseeds (33), and to ensure germination each pod includes a multitude ofselected seeds, ranging between 2 and 15 depending upon plant type. Thephysical properties of the water-soluble material layers allows each podto completely and securely contain the growing medium (30) and plantseeds (33), and retain its shape and protective attributes until cominginto contact with water. Upon watering, the soluble material rapidlydissolves, thereby allowing moisture to propagate through the growingmedium and seeds, thus activating the germination process of the seed.

An alternate embodiment of the system uses a soil and seed combinationcavity, and omits the tertiary layer (31), as shown in FIGS. 7 and 8. InFIG. 7, a dissolvable primary layer (27) is applied to the weed fabriclayer's (15) upper surface, thereby covering each grow hole (16). Thedissolvable layer is formed by a 6 cm circle of adhesive PolyvinylAlcohol (PVA) fabric, but other suitable materials and dimensions mayalso be used. The bottom-side of each grow hole (16) is covered withapproximately 1.25 cm of growing medium (30). The plant seed (33) isthen placed beneath the soilless medium. A dissolvable secondary layer(28) is adhered to the weed fabric layer's lower surface, with thepreferred embodiment using a 9 cm circle of PVA fabric (29), but othersuitable materials and dimensions may also be used. FIG. 8 shows anotherembodiment of a soil and seed combination cavity, in which the uppersurface of primary layer (27) is affixed to the lower surface of weedfabric layer (15). This is similar to the configuration of the preferredembodiment, but with a combination seed and soil cavity.

The assembled seedsheet is simply unfurled atop an existing garden ortilled/prepared ground, and may be secured with stakes, and thenwatered. Once water is added, manually or by weather, the pods (FIG. 4)rapidly dissolve leaving the desired seed an opening to grow upward, andspace below for its roots to develop. The seedsheet aids in thegermination process by stabilizing the soil against extreme weatherevents, warms the soil through sunlight absorption to optimalgermination temperatures (55-75° F.) and slowly filters high-waterevents through gradual permeation.

Each pod in the preferred embodiment is constructed from three layers ofwater-soluble film, and (heat) sealed together through a manufacturingprocess resulting in two separate, centrally located cavities. Theuppermost cavity (29) contains the growing medium (30), and thebottom-most cavity (32) contains the plant seeds (33). The manufacturingprocess begins by placing the tertiary layer (32) upon a vacuum platenwhich uses forced air suction to depress the material downwards into areservoir chamber. Seeds are then placed atop the tertiary layer intothe formed depressed cavity. The secondary layer (28) is then laid overthe top of the tertiary layer and cavity and sealed together, therebyresulting in an enclosed cavity in which the seeds securely reside. Thesealed tertiary and secondary layers, which now include a formed seedcavity (32), are then placed atop a different vacuum platen whichdepresses the two layers and cavity downwards into a new reservoirchamber. Growing medium (30) is then poured into the formed cavity untilbecoming level with the top of the cavity, resulting in approximately1.25 cm of soil depth. Lastly the primary layer (27) of water-solublefilm is placed over the top of the secondary layer and growing mediumand sealed.

Pods are affixed to the weed barrier material (15), and centrallyaligned with the growhole cutout openings (16). The cutout openings, orseed holes, are preferably circular in diameter. In the currentembodiment the upper flap of the pod, seen in FIG. 4 (27), is affixed tothe weed barrier material through an ultra-sonic weld, however thisprocess includes but is not limited to affixing through adhesives,embossing, sewing, crimping, stakes, and staples. The various layers ofthe pod are affixed to each other, as well as the weed barrier layer,along the perimeter of the grow hole. In the preferred embodiment, thepod and the grow hole are circular, though other shapes (such asrectangular) could be used, with sealing along the perimeter of thealternate shape. The completed seedsheet is placed seed-side-down atopprepared soil, secured with stakes, and watered, to begin seedgermination and growth.

As seen in FIG. 6, the software may further include the ability tosearch for recipes (37) that include some or all of the ingredientscontained within each user's specific seedsheet. This seedsheet recipedatabase (FIG. 6) is preferably a user-generated platform andmarketplace that provides the ability for a user to create a profile(44, 45), input a recipe (38), description of recipe (39) and ingredientlist that is linked to each type of included plant ingredient (41). Theuser then can generate a seedsheet containing some or all of the plantsnecessary for that specific recipe. When another user chooses topurchase a seedsheet for a specific recipe (40) the user who generatedthat recipe may receive a royalty amount. The database can be navigatedby filtering recipes by type of meal (34), the plants contained within auser's seedsheet, or can be manually filtered by ingredients the userhas on hand (35, 36), by rating (42, 47), and by user type (43). Thus,the seedsheet recipe database may be used in one or more ways. The firstmethod allows a user to search for recipes using ingredients from theplants in their seedsheet. A second method is to generate a seedsheetusing the ingredients required in one or more specific recipes.

The seedsheet Recipe Database may provide users the ability to monetizetheir recipes by integrating their ingredients into a purchasableseedsheet. Using a royalty payment structure and discounted storecredits, users are thereby incentivized to share (43) their recipesacross their own social networks to increase their recipes rating (43).The integration of the Recipe Database within the entire platform servesto further demonstrate the complete garden-to-table cycle of thissystem. The software provides the user the ability to design and layouttheir garden with the seedsheet creator, simply plant their garden usingthe seedsheet, and find recipes directly pertaining to the plantsavailable.

Although the present system has been described with respect to one ormore embodiments, it will be understood that other embodiments of thepresent system may be made without departing from the spirit and scopeof the present system. Hence, the present system is deemed limited onlyby claims and the reasonable interpretation thereof.

We claim:
 1. A seedsheet system for selecting and growing plants,comprising: a weed barrier layer containing at least one grow hole; adissolvable primary layer which spans said grow hole and is affixed tosaid weed barrier's lower surface at said grow hole's perimeter; adissolvable secondary layer affixed at its edge to said primary layer'slower surface and spanning said grow hole; a soil and seed combinationcavity formed between said secondary layer and said primary layer atsaid grow hole.